Folklore and Mythology

Members of the Standing Committee on Degrees in Folklore and Mythology

Maria Tatar, John L. Loeb Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures and of Folklore and Mythology (Chair)
Lisa T. Brooks, Assistant Professor of History and Literature and of Folklore and Mythology
Julie A. Buckler, Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures
David F. Elmer, Assistant Professor of the Classics
Deborah D. Foster, Senior Lecturer on Folklore and Mythology (Director of Studies)
Joseph C. Harris, Francis Lee Higginson Professor of English Literature and Professor of Folklore
Michael Herzfeld, Professor of Anthropology (on leave spring term)
Peter Machinist, Hancock Professor of Hebrew and other Oriental Languages
Catherine McKenna, Margaret Brooks Robinson Professor of Celtic Languages and Literatures
Stephen A. Mitchell, Professor of Scandinavian and Folklore
Gregory Nagy, Francis Jones Professor of Classical Greek Literature and Professor of Comparative Literature
Kimberley C. Patton, Professor of the Comparative and Historical Study of Religion (Divinity School)
Michael J. Puett, Professor of Chinese History
Panagiotis Roilos, Professor of Modern Greek Studies and of Comparative Literature
John Stauffer, Professor of English and of African and African American Studies
Jan Ziolkowski, Arthur Kingsley Porter Professor of Medieval Latin

Tutorials in Folklore and Mythology

Primarily for Undergraduates

Please note that Culture and Belief 16 (formerly Folklore and Mythology 100). Performance, Tradition and Cultural Studies: An Introduction to Folklore and Mythology is required for the concentration.


[*Folklore and Mythology 90d. African Women Storytellers]
Catalog Number: 8479 Enrollment: Limited to 15.
Deborah D. Foster
Half course (fall term). W., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
Reading (in translation) transcribed oral narratives, praise poems, autobiographies, plays and songs, in conjunction with historical and ethnographic sources, this seminar will attempt to understand the way in which (some) African women have shaped and been shaped by their societies, nations, and families, how they envision their lives in relation to these social groupings, and how they express their experiences through these various performances.
Note: Expected to be given in 2010–11. Preference given to Folklore and Mythology and African and African American Studies Concentrators, and students pursuing a Secondary Field in Folklore and Mythology.

Folklore and Mythology 90f. Conspiracy Theories, Rumor Panics, and Popular Culture
Catalog Number: 6106
Stephen A. Mitchell
Half course (spring term). Th., 1-3. EXAM GROUP: 15, 16
Reviews American popular culture at the extremes in light of theories about ’scapegoats’, rumor (or moral) panics, and Internet hoaxes. Probable case studies include conspiracies about 9/11, "blood for oil", the CBS National Guard hoax, the Kennedy assassination, the Apollo 11 moon landing, Area 51, SRA, and ZOG.

Folklore and Mythology 90h. Hero and Trickster - (New Course)
Catalog Number: 18681 Enrollment: Limited to 12. for undergraduates only.
Deborah D. Foster
Half course (fall term). Th., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
Human imagination has conjured two enduring mythic characters, which create habitable worlds for people in stories from cultures all over the world. Sometimes branded Hero, sometimes Trickster, these two share traits and antics, yet they seem to endorse fundamentally different values. This seminar examines both hero and trickster in several cultural contexts, comparing them with each other and with their correlates worldwide, primarily in oral traditions, but also where each has migrated to other media.

*Folklore and Mythology 91r. Supervised Reading and Research
Catalog Number: 2425
Deborah D. Foster and members of the Committee
Half course (fall term; repeated spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Instruction and direction of reading on material not treated in regular courses of instruction; special work on topics in folklore, mythology, and oral literature. Normally available only to concentrators in Folklore and Mythology.
Note: Applicants must consult the Chairman or the Head Tutor of the Committee. The signature of the Chairman or the Head Tutor is required.

*Folklore and Mythology 97 (formerly *Folklore and Mythology 97a). Fieldwork and Ethnography in Folklore
Catalog Number: 3789 Enrollment: Limited to 12.
Deborah D. Foster
Half course (spring term). Th., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 17, 18
Introduces concentrators to the study of traditions - their performance, collection, representation and interpretation. Both ethnographic and theoretical readings serve as the material for class discussion and the foundation for experimental fieldwork projects.
Note: Required of all, and limited to, concentrators.

*Folklore and Mythology 98a (formerly *Folklore and Mythology 97b). History and Theory of Folklore Methodology
Catalog Number: 5039 Enrollment: Limited to 12.
Joseph C. Harris
Half course (fall term). W., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
The development of folklore and mythology as fields of study, with particular attention to the methodological approaches suited to their areas of enquiry. Surveys the study of folklore and mythology in the 19th and early 20th centuries, but focuses especially on theoretical contributions to the study of folklore, mythology, and oral literature in recent decades. Readings from Bauman, Bronner, Dundes, Georges, Lord, Oring, Propp, Tedlock, and Zumwalt among many others.
Note: Required of all, and limited to, concentrators.

*Folklore and Mythology 98b (formerly *Folklore and Mythology 98). Tutorial — Junior Year
Catalog Number: 3685
Deborah D. Foster and members of the Committee
Half course (fall term; repeated spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Required of all concentrators. The signature of the Head Tutor or Chairman of the Committee on Degrees in Folklore and Mythology required. Normally taken in the second term of the junior year.

*Folklore and Mythology 99. Tutorial — Senior Year
Catalog Number: 3886
Deborah D. Foster and members of the Committee
Full course. Hours to be arranged.
Note: Required of all concentrators. The signature of the Head Tutor or Chairman of the Committee on Degrees in Folklore and Mythology required. Graded Sat/Unsat.

Folklore and Mythology Courses


Please consult our cross-listings for other courses that may be counted for Folklore & Mythology concentration credit. In particular, Classical Studies 145. Mythology; *English 90aa. Myth and Literature; German 166. Storytelling and Enchantment: The Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen; and others taught by Folklore & Mythology committee members.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

[Folklore and Mythology 114. Embodied Expression/Expressive Body: Dance in Cultural Context]
Catalog Number: 7982 Enrollment: Limited to 16.
Deborah D. Foster
Half course (fall term). Tu., Th., 2–3:30. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
An examination of the ways in which the dancing body internalizes and communicates cultural knowledge to both dancer and observer. By participating in dance workshops, watching dance performances (live and on film), and reading ethnographic and theoretical texts, we attempt to understand the emergent meaning of dance performances from multiple perspectives.
Note: Expected to be given in 2010–11. This course, when taken for a letter grade, meets the General Education requirement for Culture and Belief and the Core area requirement for Literature and Arts B.

[Folklore and Mythology 126. Continuing Oral Tradition in Native American Literature]
Catalog Number: 9787
Lisa T. Brooks
Half course (fall term). Tu., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
Rather than textual artifacts of a cultural past, Native American oral literatures are living traditions in particular landscapes, activities in which communities are engaged. Features trips to local Native places and close readings of recorded communal tellings and literary texts. Explores the role of oral traditions in Native American literature, emphasizing the intertextual and interdependent relationship between the oral and the written.
Note: Expected to be given in 2010–11. This course, when taken for a letter grade, meets the General Education requirement for Culture and Belief or the Core area requirement for either Foreign Cultures or Literature and Arts C, but not both Core areas. This course fulfills the requirement that one of the eight General Education courses also engages substantially with Study of the Past.

Folklore and Mythology 172. Quilts and Quiltmaking - (New Course)
Catalog Number: 33788
Felicity A. Lufkin
Half course (fall term). Tu., 4–6.
Are quilts the great American (folk) art? From intricately stitched whole-cloth quilts, to the improvisational patchworks of Gee’s Bend; from the graphic simplicity of Amish quilts to the cozy pastels of depression-era quilts; from the Aids Quilt to art quilts; quilts have taken on extraordinary significance in American culture. This class surveys the evolution of quilt-making as a social practice, considering the role of quilts in articulations of gender, ethnic, class and religious identities, and their positions within discourses of domesticity, technology, consumerism, and cultural hierarchy.

Folklore and Mythology 173. Handmade Objects and Their Makers - (New Course)
Catalog Number: 48895
Felicity A. Lufkin
Half course (spring term). W., 4–6. EXAM GROUP: 9
In the wake of the industrial revolution, John Ruskin argued for the social and moral value of handmade objects. The Arts and Crafts movement, the Bauhaus, and the Japanese Folk Craft movement were inspired in part by such ideas. And while popular or domestic practices of handmaking -- knitting, sewing, woodworking, etc. -- might seem quite separate from these movements, the current resurgence of handicrafts, fueled paradoxically by new medias and technologies, both echoes Ruskin’s moral concerns and pushes at the boundaries separating high and low, art and craft. This seminar examines the historical, intellectual, and political influences on how handmade objects and the practices by which they are made are valued and experienced in the present day.

*Folklore and Mythology 191r. Supervised Reading and Research
Catalog Number: 3255
Deborah D. Foster and members of the Committee
Half course (fall term; repeated spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Advanced reading in topics not covered in regular courses.

Cross-listed Courses

Aesthetic and Interpretive Understanding 27 (formerly Literature and Arts A-17). Childhood: Its History, Philosophy, and Literature
Aesthetic and Interpretive Understanding 33 (formerly Classical Studies 154). Ancient Fictions: The Ancient Novel in Context
African and African American Studies 187. African Religions
[Ancient Near East 90. History, Kingship, and the Gods in the Ancient Near East]
[Ancient Near East 102. Introduction to Mesopotamian Religion]
Ancient Near East 124. Myth and Myth-Making in the Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern World
[Anthropology 1630. Other People’s Beliefs: The Anthropology of Religion]
Anthropology 1640. Language and Culture
Armenian 120. Armenian Magical Texts
Armenian Studies 100. Armenian Epic
[Celtic 137. Celtic Mythology]
Celtic 138. Narrative Traditions of Medieval Wales
Celtic 151. The Literature of Medieval Celtic Christianity
[Celtic 184. The Táin]
Celtic 188. Scottish Gaelic Poetry - (New Course)
Celtic 227. Seminar: Welsh Bardic Poetry
[Chinese Literature 132. Chinatowns]
Chinese Literature 150. Old Tales in New Media: The Appropriation of Folklore in Modern and Contemporary China
Classical Studies 146. Euripides’ Bakkhai and the Modern Reception of Dionysos from 1872 - (New Course)
[Culture and Belief 15. The Presence of the Past]
Culture and Belief 16 (formerly Folklore and Mythology 100). Performance, Tradition and Cultural Studies: An Introduction to Folklore and Mythology
Culture and Belief 22. The Heroic and the Anti-Heroic in Classical Greek Civilization
Culture and Belief 35. Classical Mythology - (New Course)
Early Iranian Civilizations 102. Old Iranian Religion/Zoroastrianism
*English 51. Poets: Ballads, Sonnets, Literary History, and Poetic Form - (New Course)
*English 90aa. Myth and Literature - (New Course)
English 104. Epic, romance, and saga: orality and literary history - (New Course)
[Foreign Cultures 74. Cultures of Southern Europe]
*Freshman Seminar 32v. The Art of Storytelling
*Freshman Seminar 32w. African Musical Traditions
*Freshman Seminar 33y. Odysseys
*Freshman Seminar 49p. Peter Pan, J. M. Barrie, and the Literary Culture of Childhood
German 166. Storytelling and Enchantment: The Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen - (New Course)
*History and Literature 90q. Performing America - (New Course)
[Indian Studies 207a. Understanding Indian Ritual]
[Indian Studies 207b. Understanding Indian Ritual]
Indian Studies 219. Introduction to World Mythology
Italian 141. Renaissance Epic
[Japanese History 125. Japanese Religious Traditions: Spirituality and Popular Culture]
[Japanese History 126. Shinto: Conference Course]
Jewish Studies 104. Introduction to Yiddish Culture
[Literature 102. On Narrative]
*Literature 121. 1001 Nights: Adaptations, Transformations and Translations
[Literature 162 (formerly *Comparative Literature 207). Theory and Methods in Comparative Oral Traditions: Seminar]
[Literature 166 (formerly Comparative Literature 166). The Comic Tradition in Jewish Culture]
[Literature and Arts A-67. Poetry and Power: The Celtic Bard]
Literature and Arts C-20. The Hero of Irish Myth and Saga
Literature and Arts C-28. Icon-Ritual-Text: Reading the Culture of Medieval Rus’
[Medieval Greek 125. Byzantine Religious Tales]
Medieval Latin 105 (formerly Medieval Latin 205). The Waltharius
[Modern Greek 145 (formerly Comparative Literature 145). Dreams and Literature]
Music 208r. Ethnomusicology: Seminar
[Music 209r. Ethnomusicology: Seminar]
[Religion 17. Myth in History: An Introduction to Religion and to the Study of Religion]
[Religion 1001. Religion and Ethnography]
Religion 1012a. Dreams and the Dreaming
Religion 1012b. Dreams and the Dreaming
*Religion 1024. Tomb, Relic, and Transcendence: Seminar
Religion 1060. Hindu Goddesses and the Virgin Mary
Religion 1702. The Buddha in Myth, Image, and Ritual
[Scandinavian 150 (formerly Scandinavian 80). The Vikings and the Nordic Heroic Tradition]
Scandinavian 160a. Old Norse Language, Literature, and Culture: The Viking Legacy
Scandinavian 160br (formerly Scandinavian 160b). Old Norse Language, Literature, and Culture: Mythology
Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality 1154. I Like Ike, But I Love Lucy: Women, Popular Culture, and the 1950s
[Sumerian 141. Sumerian Myths and Epics]
*Visual and Environmental Studies 167. Adventure and Fantasy Simulation, 1871-2036: Seminar